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State could take custody of teen homeschooler'The real issue is the right of parents to control the upbringing of their children'Posted: August 28, 2009 12:35 am Eastern By Bob Unruh
A critical hearing is scheduled in Germany in that nations' war against homeschoolers to determine whether a family can continue to control the education of its high-performing son, 14. According to Joel Thornton of the International Human Rights Group, the court hearing Sept. 22 is for Hans and Petra Schmidt, who live in Southern Bavaria. From their home, the Schmidts have taught their children, Josua and Aaron, for nine years. Josua, 16, recently finished tests documenting his completion of all the requirements of the schooling system, but the fight remains over the future schooling for Aaron, who has been tested as performing at high academic levels, Thornton said. "This hearing is to determine whether the Schmidts keep the legal custody of their one child remaining in school or have the court take that custody and give it to the Youth Welfare Office," Thornton said. (Story continues below) "Why is this so important? It is not just about homeschooling. The real issue is the right of parents to control the upbringing of their children," Thornton added. "One of the fundamental rights of parents is the right to educate their children according to the dictates of their own religious beliefs. "If the state has the right to control education regarding reading and math curriculum without question, they will soon exercise the right to control the religious education as well," he continued. "This is a real threat in an ever increasing secular society," he said. IHRG's report said the Schmidts have been fined about $18,300 for homeschooling, and since they are unable to pay all of the fines, they have been subjected to a government lien on their home. "Testing both children showed that they have extraordinary academic abilities," Thornton reported. "The tests also showed the children to be socially competent. This is critical as the Germans still hold to the disproven belief that homeschool children are socially retarded." Josua tested to earn his high school diploma, showing the "Schmidts have done an excellent job of education their children at home," Thornton said. Aaron has some studies remaining but recently completed an internship at a local zoo. It is his future schooling that is being threatened by the government, IHRG said. The war over homeschooling in Germany will end, according to Thornton, "when we prevail in either the courts or the courtroom of public opinion. We will continue to support home school families in Germany as long as there are home school families in Germany. This is one of the most critical battles for religious freedom in the world. We will not back down, and neither will the faithful Germans we are standing with in this battle." WND reported in 2006 when the European Court of Human Rights affirmed Germany's nationwide ban on homeschooling, a leftover from its Nazi era that essentially said parents' desires for their children's education didn't matter. Since the 2006 affirmation of Germany's ban on homeschooling WND has reported on numerous cases handled by the IHRG or the Home School Legal Defense Association in which penalties and fines, even the threat of jail time, have been imposed against parents who object to permissive sexual teachings and objectionable material in public schools, prompting them to homeschool their children instead. Several hundred families are believed to be homeschooling Germany. Virtually all are in some type of court proceeding or living underground. One family even fled to the U.S. and has a request for asylum pending because of the persecution they would face if they returned. The Strasbourg, France-based court in its 2006 decision said the parental "wish" to have their children grow up without liberal sexual influences "could not take priority over compulsory school attendance." The decision also said the parents do not have an "exclusive" right to lead their children's education. A website for the Practical Homeschool Magazine noted one of the first acts by Adolf Hitler when he moved into power was to create the governmental Ministry of Education and give it control of all schools and school-related issues. In 1937, the dictator said, "The youth of today is ever the people of tomorrow. For this reason we have set before ourselves the task of inoculating our youth with the spirit of this community of the people at a very early age, at an age when human beings are still unperverted and therefore unspoiled. This Reich stands, and it is building itself up for the future, upon its youth. And this new Reich will give its youth to no one, but will itself take youth and give to youth its own education and its own upbringing."
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Related special offers: Let everyone know your child is an honor student - at home! The Harsh Truth about Public Schools You've Decided to Homeschool, Now What? "Christianity and the American Commonwealth" "The Little Book of Big Reasons to Homeschool" Previous stories: Homeschoolers win when government charges dropped Government chases homeschool family Challenge to mandatory government sex-ed grows Parents: Required sex ed violates daughter's rights Asylum hearing set for homeschooling family Homeschoolers seek asylum from Nazi-era law Will homeschooling parents end up behind bars? Homeschooling parents to appeal prison terms Parents sent to jail for homeschooling Government chases homeschool family Judge: Homeschooling like driving drunk Amendment protecting parental rights urged Courts offer homeschoolers zilch, expert says Court upholds Nazi-era ban on homeschooling Parents sent to jail for homeschooling Parents losing custody for homeschooling kids Girl sent to psych ward for homeschooling, parents billed Prosecutor wants homeschool parents jailed Homeschool family reaches England Parents race to escape before court takes kids Truancy hearing targets homeschooling mom Homeschoolers facing $6,300 fine American missionaries targeted for deportation Courts offer homeschoolers zilch, expert says Court gives Melissa back to family Western homeschoolers need political asylum from democracy 3 families face fines, frozen accounts 'Youth worker' lies about homeschool student 5 'well-educated' kids put in state custody Girl, 15, begs to return to homeschooling parents Psych tests ordered for homeschooling parents 3rd Reich homeschool prohibition defended Homeschool family told to give up 5 other kids Homeschooler's parents allowed 1 visit a week Court-ordered foster care replaces psych ward Homeschool student disappears from psych ward 'Psych ward' homeschooler case goes international Bob Unruh is a news editor for WorldNetDaily.com.
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